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Head's hometown century floors England after brief hopes of fightback

Australia 371 and 271 for 4 (Head 142*, Carey 52*) lead England 286 (Stokes 83, Archer 51, Boland 3-45, Cummins 3-69) by 356 runs

At times during the first half of the third day at Adelaide Oval, England threatened to keep their Ashes hopes alive, but on his home ground Travis Head's second century of the series as an opening batter carried Australia to a 356-run lead which will surely be turned into a 3-0 Ashes retention at some point over the weekend.

For Head, who was dropped on 99 by Harry Brook at gully, it was the continuation of a magnificent run in Adelaide which has brought four of his 11 Test centuries, all of them coming in his last six innings at the ground in four consecutive matches. Head joined Don Bradman (Headingley and Melbourne), Michael Clarke (Adelaide) and Steven Smith (Melbourne) as Australians with centuries in four consecutive Test matches at the same venue

This one could also have gone a long way towards cementing him as an opener following his hasty promotion in Perth and the blazing hundred which followed. Overall it was Head's fourth hundred against England and by the close his career-best 175, which also came in Adelaide, was looming into view.

Initially, at least, the wheels did not come off for England as they had threatened to do on the second day at 168 for 8. But any hopes of the type of run chase that has characterized the Bazball era appeared forlorn during a desperate final session that saw Australia pile up 152 in 35 overs as Head combined with fellow South Australian Alex Carey in an unbroken 122-run stand.

That Australia only led on 85 after the first innings was down to a resilient 106-run stand between Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer as England showed impressive character during the first session, and for a time it was far from a foregone conclusion that Australia would dominate.

Having been forced to take the second new ball to wrap up England's innings, where Stokes threatened to play one of his game-changing innings before falling to Mitchell Starc for the 12th time in Tests, Australia then lost Jake Weatherald before lunch. He was lbw to Brydon Carse, who produced his best spell since the first day in Perth either side of the break, although Weatherald would have been saved with a review as the ball pitched outside leg.

But after Josh Tongue removed an out-of-sorts Marnus Labuschagne England were unable to apply any pressure on Head and Usman Khawaja as the pair added 86 in 113 balls. Though Khawaja and Cameron Green fell in quick succession any sense of vulnerability soon vanished as Head and Carey set about their partnership. Carey continued his outstanding match with a half-century to follow the first-innings hundred.

Head was able to freely collect runs square of the wicket throughout his innings as England fed him outside off while they also tried the short-ball ploy with well-spread fields. Head barely scored straight down the ground off the quicks, but jumped out to England's spinners, sending Will Jacks over long-off then doing the same to Joe Root to bring up his century from 146 balls having been somewhat becalmed in the 90s.

Jacks, a part-time spinner who kept his place ahead of Shoaib Bashir after a promising show with the bat in Brisbane, had managed to remove Khawaja with a short, wide delivery when the left-hander edged a cut shot. But by the end of the day his match figures read an eye-watering 3 for 212 from 39 overs. Stokes, meanwhile, did not bowl himself at all while Archer sent down 10 economical, but largely unthreatening, overs.

Australia's batting was not without its blips. Labuschagne laboured through 45 balls before being squared up by Tongue and edging low to slip in a manner that revived memories of the struggles that led to his omission earlier this year. However, perhaps more significant in the shorter term was the dismissal of Green who edged a half-volley from Tongue to slip to complete a poor match with the bat.

Having clipped limply to midwicket in the first innings, Green avoided a pair with a well-timed drive first ball against Jacks, but did little to quell concerns over being a poor starter when he was beaten on the drive by Tongue before edging the next delivery. His Test average in Australia now sits at 28.62 from 18 matches. With Khawaja in the runs this week, hope that Smith will be fit for Melbourne and Beau Webster part of the squad, the selectors could face another tricky decision for Boxing Day.

England had resumed the third day on 213 for 8 and were so far behind that it was difficult to see a way back, but Stokes and Archer extended their partnership to such an extent that thoughts were just turning to what could be possible. Having clung on to see out the second day, Stokes showed much greater intent when play resumed, driving Scott Boland through the covers in the opening over.

He went to his fifty from 159 balls, the slowest of his career, over-taking that performance at Headingley in 2019, then advanced out of the crease to Boland before unfurling a reverse sweep against Nathan Lyon. He greeted Pat Cummins' first ball of the day with a crunching pull as the deficit dropped below 100.

Between times Archer, who Stokes felt no need to protect from the strike, had launched Lyon over deep midwicket for six on his way to a maiden Test half-century from 96 balls in what became the highest ninth-wicket stand in an Ashes Test in Australia since 1925.

Australia weren't desperate but there was a growing sense of urgency to wrap things up. Starc, up to this point wicketless, produced the piece of magic when a wobble-seam delivery jagged back past Stokes' inside edge and castled off stump, in an almost carbon-copy of the first innings in Perth. As his stumps were splattered, Stokes let out a roar of anguish, threw his head back and tossed the bat in the air. At that stage he had kept England afloat, but by the end of the day they were sinking again.

Australia 3rd innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st8TM HeadJ Weatherald
2nd45TM HeadM Labuschagne
3rd86UT KhawajaTM Head
4th10TM HeadC Green
5th122AT CareyTM Head